It has been said that runners have their best thoughts of the day while out running. Runner and writer
Michael Selman shares his
"Thoughts on Running" with us here at ontherunevents.com.
The old man poked his head out the front door to be sure that the coast
was clear. He was about to do something drastic, and he preferred to have
no witnesses. Perhaps, he was a little embarrassed about it. But he was
frail and weak, with seemingly nothing to look forward to in his future,
and he knew it. So the old man decided it was time to end his sorry old
life. And he was going to do it by running.
He peered out to the neighbor's houses, first to his left, and then to
his right. There was nobody else out in his well-maintained neighborhood
at this moment, and he knew that his time had come. So the sorry old man
slowly closed the front door behind him, and sheepishly ran out to the
street. And he attempted to put an end to a life whose dreams had left him
long ago, it seems.
As he slowly jogged down the street, he thought his heart would
explode. Was this how it was going to end? He felt way too old for this
kind of exertion, and the old man could feel the blood rushing to his head
as he pushed on. He wondered just how long it would be before his demise
would come. His legs were screaming for a break, but he ignored the body's
pleas to stop. He was an old man on a mission, and he pushed relentlessly
on.
He ran for about a mile, around the neighborhood, and he observed that
his house was suddenly in front of him again. He could go no further, and
so, right where he started the attempt, he stopped, stepped back inside
his house, and collapsed motionless on his living room floor for what
seemed forever. His whole body was pounding with every heartbeat, and he
felt sick to his stomach. His chest hurt, and his legs throbbed, but that
day, he didn't die. He lay there, on the floor wondering if he was making
a big mistake with his attempt to kill himself off.
For the next couple of days, eradicating himself was the last thing on
the old man's mind. That one attempt seemed like it was enough to
discourage him from ever trying again. He hurt all over, and he was close
to resigning himself to settling on just being old and miserable forever.
But by the third day, he was starting to revisit the thought of
eliminating his sad self again. And the fourth day, he made another
attempt, using the same method. Again, he closed the door behind him, and
he ran another mile. And a funny thing happened. Though it wasn't nearly
enjoyable, he found it didn't hurt quite as much, and he actually felt a
little better a little sooner afterwards. And the next day, the thought of
trying again wasn't so for out of his mind.
The old man found that each time he ran, it became less and less
painful, and now, instead of collapsing in the middle of the house after a
run, he was actually starting to plan the next one. He purchased himself a
running log, and monitoring his progress. He bought himself a watch, and
started noticing his runs getting quicker and quicker. He was finding that
he was having dreams of the future, and had something to live for. He was
starting to actually feel younger than he ever had before. But in reality,
the old man was succeeding in his quest. The old man was dying.
The old man started entering races. At first, he could not run one all
the way without stopping. There were often very few people, if any, behind
him, but the old man didn't seem to mind. After all, he was ancient, so it
was positive that he was doing this at all. He continued running, and he
continued racing, and he continued to experience a slow death. His weekly
mileage increased to 15 miles, then through the 20's, and even into the
30's some weeks. and his race times dropped. 40 minute 5K times dropped to
35 minutes, then 30 and even 25 minutes and lower.
Then, on the very day he ran his fastest race ever, it finally
happened. While he was driving to the race, he had a feeling this was
going to be the day. And he was right. He had been running for about 6
months now, and was actually starting to feel very good. But his running
indicated that he still had a serious death wish. He ran more than ever,
and also faster. His life was becoming full, and his dreams were starting
to appear in vivid color.
As he approached the finish line of the race this day, he looked down
at his watch. 22:10. Never in a million years did the man dream of running
such a fast time. As he crossed the finish line, with one last big push,
he went to stop his watch to immortalize this race. Then he looked at the
watch, just to be sure it was true. The watch was blank. The battery had
given out. Foreshadowing can be spooky some times.
At the awards ceremony, the trophies went three deep in each age group.
He waited and wondered as they announced the awards in the youngest age
groups first. Finally, they announced the winners in his age group. First
place, and then second place in his age group were announced. His name was
not called. Then they announced the third place winner. It was him. He had
won third place in his age group. The 25-29 year age group.
He went to pick up his award, and as he proudly carried it back to show
his young wife and baby, he knew that he had finally accomplished his
goal. He had finally killed off the old man, and replaced it with the fit,
youthful 26 year old he had wanted to become when he first started
running.. Looking back, he realized it was a slow, and sometimes painful
death, but he knew the old man would not be missed. He liked who he had
become much better.
He gazed at his blank watch one more time. And he realized that at the
very moment the watch stopped never to beep again, that the old man died.
The Roads Scholar, Michael Selman runs and writes in Atlanta GA. He
would love to hear from you. Please e-mail him at TheRoadsScholar@aol.com
with any questions or comments.